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A popular suggestion is to eliminate the income tax and replace it with a national sales tax, called the fair tax. The idea is that everyone pays their fair share based on what they spend rather than what they earn. Taxing consumption rather than productivity would encourage saving and investment, in turn stimulating production and economic growth.

The national sales tax would fall between 23% and 30%. It could replace the income tax and the 6.2% employee portion of the Social Security tax.

If the income tax was eliminated, the Internal Revenue Service, as well as thousands of pages of the tax code, would be obsolete. You would not be required to report your personal financial information to the government, which would both protect your privacy and reduce falsification on tax returns.

Critics suggest that a national sales tax is regressive, favoring the rich. This criticism depends on how you measure rich, that is, what you use as a denominator. If you measure dollars spent per dollars of income, the tax is regressive. The poor spend a greater percentage of their income. Advocates try to address this issue by providing a prebate of taxes up to the poverty level.

But income is only one measure of rich. It measures your productivity and the value of your yearly labor. Advocates of the fair tax suggest this should not be the deciding factor of how you ought to be taxed.

Another measure of rich would be those who have a higher standard of living. Those who live rich would have to pay tax on whatever portion of their assets they choose to spend. For wealthy individuals who are spending amassed fortunes, the change would be much more progressive. Wealthy individuals may have little income and yet have a very high standard of living.

These are three very different measures of rich: accumulated wealth, annual production and consumer lifestyle. A flat sales tax is exactly in proportion to this third factor, a lavish consumer lifestyle. If you use dollars spent as your measure of rich, the tax is fair and exactly proportional so those who spend more pay more.

Claims of “fair” or even “regressive” or “progressive” depend very much on what is used as the denominator. You can argue that your lifestyle spending–lavish or frugal–is at least a measure of how rich you live. And it is easy to make the case that how rich you live should determine how much you should be taxed.

Taxing income decreases productivity. Taxing consumption will similarly decrease spending. Less demand for consumer goods will reduce prices and also consumer debt. Families will be encouraged to have capital to save and invest as the tax burdens are removed on investments.

Deferred consumption, money not spent, is the textbook definition of capital. And because a sales tax is a consumption tax, more people will defer consumption and have capital to invest instead. Money invested earns more money. Increased savings and investing help create a healthy country with better economic growth.

One benefit of eliminating a progressive income tax is that it can accidentally tax people it doesn’t intend to burden. Many economic incidents can artificially inflate your income for a single year, pushing you into the highest tax bracket. For example, selling a house in California is the easiest way to be part of the top 1% and get hit with tremendous taxes. With a sales tax, one year of extraordinary spending would at least be taxed at a flat rather than a progressive rate. Every dollar spent would be treated the same for tax purposes.

Tax evasion would still be a problem. Currently unreported income in the United States is estimated to be about $2 trillion. This is distinct from illegal economic activity. Moving the tax from an income tax to a sales tax may or may not change this dynamic. Contractors may be just as tempted to offer discounts if you pay in cash and promise to keep quiet about it.

Similarly, Internet sales and goods from overseas would need to have a sales tax applied. Otherwise online orders from foreign countries could be another method of dodging the tax. A foreign sales tax acts the same as an import tariff.

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